Background of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a tubeless pneumatic vehicle tire which is resistant
to air permeability in the absence of a rubber innerliner. More particularly; the
present invention relates to a tubeless pneumatic vehicle tire in which the rubber
coating of the innermost body ply is formed from a rubber composition which is resistant
to air permeability.
[0002] Conventional tubeless pneumatic vehicle tires generally contain a relatively large
number of separate components including a tread, subtread, undertread, reinforcing
belts or belt plies, sidewalls, abrasion strips, beads, bead fillers, one or more
body plies and a relatively air impermeable innerliner. In addition, these components
have different physical property requirements and therefore require different rubber
compounds. It will therefore be readily apparent that the manufacture of a tubeless
pneumatic tire is a costly, time consuming, multi-step process which involves the
preparation of a number of rubber compounds of differing formulations; the conversion
of the rubber compounds into tire components such as treads, sidewalls, body plies,
etc by various methods such as extrusion, calendaring, milling, etc.; and the assembly
of the tire components into tire form by a tire builder. Moreover, while efforts have
been and are being made to automate the tire building process, much of the assembly
process is still conducted manually by the tire builder.
[0003] Accordingly, it will clearly be evident that either a reduction in the number of
rubber compounds or the number of tire components or both would result in a significant
reduction in the time and costs involved in the manufacture of the tire. As a consequence,
those skilled in the tire art have increased their efforts to simplify the tire manufacturing
process.
[0004] One approach which involves both a reduction in the number of different rubber compounds
and tire components is described in published Canadian patent application no. 2,021,778
to Stevens et al having a publication date of January 26, 1991. This published application
relates to a pneumatic vehicle tire having a tread strip, a reinforcing belt, two
sidewalls, a carcass that is anchored in beads by being looped about bead cores that
are pull-resistant and/or resistant to compression, and respective profiled inner
elements that are disposed radially outwardly of the bead cores. The application discloses
that at least one of the elements of tread strip, sidewalls, profiled inner elements,
beads and rubber coatings for the belt, carcass and bead cores is formed of a rubber
mixture comprising 30 to 100% by weight of a nitrile group - containing hydrocarbon
rubber having a double bond proportion of no greater than 13 per 100 carbon atoms.
The application further discloses that the use of this rubber mixture allows one to
employ only three rubber compounds in the tire; that due to the extremely high air
impermeability of the rubber mixture the conventional rubber innerliner can be eliminated
and that certain other components such as belt covers and bead reinforcing inserts
can also be eliminated.
[0005] Rubber innerliners are utilized in tubeless pneumatic tires because of their high
resistance to air permeability. The innerliner is not wrapped around the bead cores
but extends from bead to bead covering only the inner periphery of the tire. This
is consistent with its basic function which is to prevent permeability of air through
other tire components such as body plies, sidewalls, etc. Conventional rubber innerliners
are generally composed of highly saturated rubbers such as butyl rubber, halogenated
butyl rubbers or blends of butyl rubbers with small amounts (e.g. 10% by weight or
less) of natural rubber.
[0006] The use of such rubber innerliners in tubeless tires while beneficial in preventing
air permeability presents a number of significant disadvantages. Thus, the use of
a separate rubber innerliner requires the preparation of an additional rubber compound
and the assembly of an additional tire component during the tire manufacturing process.
In addition, such rubber innerliners because of the highly saturated nature of the
butyl rubbers employed therein generally exhibit minimal adhesion to other tire components.
Moreover, the use of a separate rubber innerliner adds approximately 1.5 pounds to
the total weight of the tire.
[0007] Accordingly, the elimination of the separate rubber innerliner used in tubeless tires
while maintaining satisfactory resistance to air permeability would provide significant
advantages particularly in reducing labor costs and total tire weight.
Summary of the Invention
[0008] In accordance with the present invention, a tubeless pneumatic vehicle tire which
is resistant to air permeability in the absence of a separate rubber innerliner is
provided. The tire comprises a tread, one or more reinforcing belts, sidewalls, one
or more body plies and beads wherein the rubber coating or skim of the innermost body
ply is formed from a rubber composition which comprises: (a) from about 10 to about
60 parts by weight of natural rubber: (b) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight
of a halogenated butyl rubber; (c) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight of epichlorohydrin
rubber; and (d) from about 5 to about 50 parts by weight of a metal salt containing
material selected from the group consisting of a metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic
acid and a graft copolymer comprising a diene polymer or copolymer having pendently
grafted thereto a polymerized metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid.
Detailed Description of the Invention
[0009] As indicated, the tubeless pneumatic tire of the invention has acceptable resistance
to air permeability in the absence of a separate rubber innerliner. The elimination
of the innerliner is achieved in accordance with the invention by using a novel rubber
composition to form the rubber coating or skim of the innermost body ply of the tire.
The rubber composition of the invention not only provides for acceptable resistance
to air permeability but also provides for acceptable adhesion to surrounding rubber
stocks and to the tire cord utilized in the body plies. It should be noted that the
butyl rubber based compositions conventionally employed as the innerliner could not
be used as the rubber coating for body plies due to their minimal adhesion properties
to other tire stocks and to tire cord.
[0010] As indicated, the rubber composition of the invention comprises specified proportions
of: (a) natural rubber; (b) a halogenated butyl rubber; (c) an epichlorohydrin rubber;
and (d) a metal salt-containing material selected from the group consisting of a metal
salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid and a graft copolymer comprising a diene polymer
or copolymer backbone having pendently grafted thereto a polymerized metal salt of
an unsaturated carboxylic acid.
[0011] Halogenated butyl rubbers which may be employed in the rubber composition of the
invention include any of those conventionally used in rubber innerliners for tires.
The preferred halogenated butyl rubbers are chlorobutyl rubber and bromobutyl rubber.
A particularly preferred chlorobutyl rubber is a chlorinated copolymer of isobutylene
and isoprene having a Mooney viscosity (ML/8/212°F) of 51-60, unsaturation level of
1.1-1.7 mole percent, and a chlorine content of from 1.1-1.3 percent by weight available
from Enjay Chemical Co. under the designation Enjay Butyl HT 10-66.
[0012] Epichlorohydrin rubbers which may be employed in the rubber composition include those
having chlorine contents of from about 20 to about 40 percent. A preferred epichlorohydrin
is one having a chlorine content of 36 percent which is commercially available from
Nippon Zeon under the designation H65.
[0013] Metal salt-containing materials which may be employed in the rubber composition are
metal salts of unsaturated carboxylic acids. The metal salts per se may be included
in the rubber composition or they may be included as parts of a graft copolymer comprising
a diene polymer or copolymer backbone having pendently grafted thereto the polymerized
metal salt of the unsaturated carboxylic acid.
[0014] Unsaturated carboxylic acids which may be used to form the metal salt are alpha,
beta-ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic acids having from 3 to 8 carbon atoms such
as acrylic, methacrylic, cinnamic and crotonic acids of which acrylic and methacrylic
acids are preferred. Suitable metal ions which may be used to form the metal salts
include sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium, zinc, barium, aluminum, tin, zirconium,
lithium and cadmium of which zinc and magnesium are preferred. The metal ion is preferably
introduced in the form of the salt of the carboxylic acid. A particularly preferred
metal salt is zinc dimethacrylate.
[0015] Diene polymers or copolymers which may comprise the backbone of the graft copolymer
include homopolymers of conjugated dienes and copolymers of conjugated dienes and
vinyl aromatic hydrocarbons. Suitable diene monomers which can be used to form the
homopolymers or copolymers include 1,3-butadiene, isoprene, 1,3-pentadiene, 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene,
1,3-hexadiene and the like. The preferred diene monomers are 1,3-butadiene and isoprene.
Suitable vinyl aromatic hydrocarbon monomers which can be used to form the copolymers
include styrene, alpha-methylstyrene, p-methylstyrene, vinyltoluene, vinylnaphthalene
and the like. The preferred vinyl aromatic hydrocarbon monomer is styrene.
[0016] The preferred diene polymers for use as the backbone of the graft copolymer are polybutadiene
and polyisoprene. The polybutadiene employed is a conventional polybutadiene rubber
having a vinyl or 1,2-microstructure content of from about 8 to 12 percent.
[0017] The graft copolymer can be prepared by a relatively uncomplicated procedure. Thus,
the graft copolymer can be prepared by first dissolving a diene polymer or copolymer
such as polyisoprene or polybutadiene or styrene/butadiene copolymer (SBR) in a solvent
such as hexane, then adding a metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid such as
zinc dimethacrylate to the polymer solution, adding a free radical initiator such
as azo-bis-isobutyronitrile to the polymer solution and then heating the reaction
mixture at a temperature of from about 40 to about 150°C for a time period of from
about 0.1 to about 100 hours to produce the graft copolymer. A more detailed description
of the method for preparing the graft copolymer herein is set forth in co-pending
U.S. application serial no.
(Docket No. D9206051), commonly assigned to the same assignee herein, filed on an
even date herewith; the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
[0018] The graft copolymer employed in the rubber composition of the invention contains
from about 20 to about 40 percent by weight of the zinc dimethacrylate or other metal
salt and from about 60 to 80 percent by weight of the diene polymer or copolymer.
[0019] As set forth above, the rubber compositions of the invention comprise: (a) from about
10 to about 60 parts by weight of natural rubber; (b) from about 20 to about 30 parts
by weight of halogenated butyl rubber; (c) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight
of epichlorohydrin, and (d) from about 5 to about 50 parts by weight of metal salt-containing
material selected from the group consisting of a metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic
acid and a graft copolymer comprising a diene polymer or copolymer backbone having
pendently grafted thereto a metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid. A preferred
rubber composition of the invention comprises 50 parts by weight of natural rubber,
25 parts by weight of chlorobutyl rubber, 25 parts by weight of epichlorohydrin and
15 parts by weight of zinc dimethacrylate.
[0020] The rubber compositions of the invention may also contain conventional rubber additives
such as carbon black, fillers, plasticizers, antioxidants, curing agents, curing accelerators
and the like. Rubber compositions containing the rubber additives may be prepared
by compounding or mixing the rubbers and rubber additives using standard rubber mixing
equipment and procedures. The rubber compositions are coated on tire cord such as
polyester or steel cord using conventional procedures such as calendaring or extrusion.
The rubber compositions may be vulcanized using conventional rubber vulcanization
conditions.
[0021] The following examples are submitted for the purpose of further illustrating the
nature of the present invention and should not be regarded as a limitation on the
scope thereof. Parts and percentages shown in the examples are by weight unless otherwise
indicated.
Examples 1-2
[0022] In these examples, body stock compounds containing the rubber compositions of the
invention were prepared and evaluated for properties. For comparative purposes, a
butyl rubber based innerliner compound was prepared to serve as a control and evaluated
for the same properties.
[0024] The rubber compounds were mixed using conventional rubber mixing equipment and procedures.
Samples of the rubber compounds were tested for stock to stock adhesion, stock to
body ply cord adhesion and air permeability.
[0025] Stock to stock adhesion involved testing the adhesion of each rubber compound to
itself, to a standard abrasion gum strip compound and to a standard sidewall compound.
[0026] The general procedure used to prepare the adhesion pads and conduct the adhesion
test was as follows:
A first ply of 7X7 inch calendared polyester backing was prepared. A second ply
of 7X7 inch calendared polyester fabric backing having cords running in the opposite
direction from the cord direction of the first ply was applied to the first ply. A
third ply of test stock milled into 7X7 inch sheets having a thickness of about 50
mils was applied to the second ply. A sheet of Holland cloth 3¼x6½ inches was applied
to the third ply to provide an unadhered portion of the test strip for clamping in
the test machine. A fourth ply of test stock milled into a 7X7 inch sheet having a
thickness of about 50 mils was applied to the third ply. A fifth ply of 7X7 inch calendared
polyester fabric backing was then applied to the fourth ply with the cords running
in the same direction as in the second ply. A sixth ply of 7X7 inch calendared polyester
fabric backing was then applied to the fifth ply with the cords running in the same
direction as the first ply.
[0027] The resulting test pad was then clicked in a machine to produce a pad approximately
6x6 inches in dimension. The pad was then wrapped in Holland, inserted into a 6x6
inch mold and cured for 15 minutes at 375°F under a pressure of about 300 psi. The
cured pad was cut into test strips approximately 1 inch in width, each strip was clamped
in an Instron test machine and tested for peel adhesion. The adhesion test was conducted
in accordance with procedure set forth in ASTM D413-82. Results are reported in pounds
force per inch (lbs/in). After the test is completed, the test strips are examined
to determine whether the failure mode is interfacial (I), indicating that the separation
occurred at the interface of the test stocks, or jagged (J), indicating cohesive tearing
into the bulk of either or both of the test stocks or failed to backing (B).
[0028] The general procedure for testing adhesion of the rubber compounds to body ply cord
was as follows:
Samples of 1300 denier/2 ends per inch polyester cord treated with a conventional
dip are placed in a mold and covered with a thin sheet of test stock. The samples
are cured and cut into strips for testing. Each cured test strip has seven cords of
which the two end cords are cut and not tested. The test strips are clamped in an
Instron type machine and the average force obtained by pulling the cords over an established
length is divided by the number of cords. The adhesive strength is reported in kilogram
force per cord. The cords are then examined to determine the extent of rubber coverage
remaining on the cords.
[0029] The general procedure for testing air permeability of the rubber compounds was as
follows:
Samples of cured rubber sheets approximately 5 inches in diameter and 20 mils in
thickness are clamped in stainless steel cells equipped with air inlet valves. The
stainless steel cells are placed in a mineral oil bath maintained at a temperature
of 65°C. The cells are attached through their inlet valves to the manifold of an external
air cylinder which supplies air at a pressure of 48 psi and by means of hypodermic
tubing to a rotary valve which in turn is attached to a data monitor consisting of
an electronic pressure transducer. The main valve of the air cylinder is turned on
and the pressure inlet valves of the cells are slowly opened. The system is then allowed
to equilibrate for about 3 hours. When ready to begin testing, the rotary valve is
turned to the cell of interest. The change in pressure in the cell caused by permeation
of air through the test stock is determined by changes in voltage during the test.
Using this data long with the known cell volume, the sample thickness and the average
permeation time, a permeation coefficient Q can readily be determined. The test results
are reported in terms of the permeation coefficient Q and in this test lower values
of Q indicate better resistance to air permeation.
[0030] Test conditions and results are shown in Table I.

[0031] As indicated by the above data, the rubber compositions of the invention have good
stock to stock adhesion, good rubber to cord adhesion and acceptable resistance to
air permeability.
Examples 3-4
[0032] These examples illustrate body stock compounds formed from rubber compositions of
the invention containing zinc dimethacrylate grafted polyisoprene (hereafter Zn(MA)₂PI).
[0033] The body stock compounds had the following formulations:
Examples |
3 |
4 |
natural rubber |
20.00 |
14.00 |
bromobutyl rubber |
25.00 |
25.00 |
epichlorohydrin |
25.00 |
25.00 |
Zn(MA)₂ PI(1) |
45.00 |
- |
Zn(MA)₂ PI(2) |
- |
45.00 |
GPF carbon black |
40.00 |
40.00 |
clay |
30.00 |
30.00 |
stearic acid |
1.00 |
1.00 |
zinc oxide |
2.25 |
2.25 |
lubricant |
4.00 |
4.00 |
tackifier |
2.00 |
2.00 |
barium carbonate |
1.25 |
1.25 |
2,4,6-trimercapto-s-triazine |
0.30 |
0.30 |
activator |
1.00 |
1.00 |
benzothiazyldisulfide |
1.13 |
1.13 |
sulfur |
0.38 |
0.38 |
Total |

|

|
(1) contains 30 parts phr of polyisoprene and 15 phr of zinc dimethacrylate |
(c) contains 36 phr of polyisoprene and 9 phr of zinc dimethacrylate |
[0034] The above compounds were mixed and tested for stock to stock adhesion and stock to
body ply cord adhesion as set forth in Examples 1-2 above.
[0035] Tests, test conditions and test results are shown in Table II.

1. A tubeless pneumatic vehicle tire having resistance to air permeability in the absence
of an innerliner comprises a tread, one or more reinforcing belts, sidewalls, one
or more body plies and beads; wherein the rubber coating of the innermost body ply
is formed from a rubber composition comprising:
(a) from about 10 to about 60 parts by weight of natural rubber;
(b) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight of halogenated butyl rubber;
(c) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight of epichlorohydrin rubber; and
(d) from about 5 to about 50 parts by weight of a metal salt-containing material selected
from the group consisting of a metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid and a
graft copolymer comprising polymer or copolymer backbone having pendently grafted
thereto a polymerized metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid.
2. The tire of Claim 1 wherein said halogenated butyl rubber is selected from the group
consisting of chlorobutyl rubber and bromobutyl rubber.
3. The tire of Claim 1 wherein said epichlorohydrin rubber has a chlorine content of
from about 20 to about 40 percent.
4. The tire of Claim 1 wherein said metal salt-containing material is a metal salt of
an alpha, beta-ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic acid.
5. The tire of Claim 4 wherein said metal salt is zinc dimethacrylate.
6. The tire of Claim 1 wherein said metal salt-containing material is a graft copolymer
comprising a diene polymer or copolymer backbone having pendently grafted thereto
a polymerized metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid.
7. The tire of Claim 6 wherein said graft copolymer contains from about 20 to about 40
percent by weight of said metal salt and from about 60 to about 80 percent by weight
of said diene polymer or copolymer.
8. The tire of Claim 6 wherein said graft copolymer is a zinc dimethacrylate grafted
polybutadiene.
9. The tire of Claim 6 wherein said graft copolymer is a zinc dimethacrylate grafted
polyisoprene.
10. A rubber composition which is resistant to air permeability in the cured state comprising:
(a) from about 10 to about 60 parts by weight of natural rubber;
(b) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight of halogenated butyl rubber;
(c) from about 20 to about 30 parts by weight of epichlorohydrin rubber; and
(d) from about 5 to about 50 parts by weight of a metal salt-containing material selected
from the group consisting of a metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid and a
graft copolymer comprising a diene polymer or copolymer backbone having pendently
grafted thereto a polymerized metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid.
11. The composition of Claim 10 wherein said halogenated butyl rubber is selected form
the group consisting of chlorobutyl rubber and bromobutyl rubber.
12. The composition of Claim 10 wherein said epichlorohydrin rubber has a chlorine content
of from about 20 to about 40 percent.
13. The composition of Claim 10 wherein said metal salt-containing material is a metal
salt of an alpha, beta-ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic acid.
14. The composition of Claim 13 wherein said metal salt is zinc dimethacrylate.
15. The composition of Claim 10 wherein said metal salt-containing material is a graft
copolymer comprising a diene polymer or copolymer backbone having pendently grafted
thereto a polymerized metal salt of an unsaturated carboxylic acid.
16. The composition of claim 15 wherein said graft copolymer contains from about 20 to
about 40 percent by weight of said metal salt and from about 60 to about 80 percent
by weight of said diene polymer or copolymer.
17. The composition of Claim 10 wherein said graft copolymer is a zinc dimethacrylate
grafted polybutadiene.
18. The composition of Claim 10 wherein said graft copolymer is a zinc dimethacrylate
grafted polyisoprene.